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Publication : A novel guanylin family (guanylin, uroguanylin, and renoguanylin) in eels: possible osmoregulatory hormones in intestine and kidney.

First Author  Yuge S Year  2003
Journal  J Biol Chem Volume  278
Issue  25 Pages  22726-33
PubMed ID  12684514 Mgi Jnum  J:84069
Mgi Id  MGI:2665152 Doi  10.1074/jbc.M303111200
Citation  Yuge S, et al. (2003) A novel guanylin family (guanylin, uroguanylin, and renoguanylin) in eels: possible osmoregulatory hormones in intestine and kidney. J Biol Chem 278(25):22726-33
abstractText  As the intestine is an essential organ for fish osmoregulation, the intestinal hormone guanylins may perform major functions, especially in euryhaline fish such as eels and salmonids. From the intestine of an eel, we identified cDNAs encoding three distinct guanylin-like peptides. Based on the sequence of mature peptide and sites of production, we named them guanylin, uroguanylin, and renoguanylin. Renoguanylin is a novel peptide that possesses the characteristics of both guanylin and uroguanylin and was abundantly expressed in the kidney. By immunohistochemistry, guanylin was localized exclusively in goblet cells, but not enterochromaffin cells, of the intestine. After transfer of eels from fresh water to seawater, mRNA expression of guanylin and uroguanylin did not change for 3 h, but it increased after 24 h. The increase was profound (2-6-fold) after adaptation to seawater. The expression of uroguanylin was also up-regulated in the kidney of seawater-adapted eels, but that of renoguanylin was not so prominent as other guanylins in both intestine and kidney. Collectively, the novel eel guanylin family appears to have important functions for seawater adaptation, particularly long-term adaptation. Eel guanylin may be secreted from goblet cells into the lumen with mucus in response to increased luminal osmolality and act on the epithelium to regulate water and salt absorption.
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